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A Summer To Remember

A Summer To Remember

Robinson High lacrosse player had memorable trip to Ireland
By David Driver, MVP Communications

WASHINGTON – The MVP International girls lacrosse team that won its division in Ireland last month was made up of players from five different Virginia high schools.

But that didn’t keep the squad from drawing even closer – as most of the squad is also part of the same club program.

“Me and my friends, we are close-knit group but we all happen to go to different high schools,” says Julia Lundy, a junior midfielder/attack at James Robinson High in Fairfax, Virginia. “I am very good friends with Ellie Suddarth and Summer Eastman (of Lake Braddock High). I talk to them daily; it was neat to go to a different country with them.”

Robinson and Lake Braddock are public-school rivals just a few minutes apart in Northern Virginia. Other schools represented on the MVP International squad, which went 9-0 at a festival in Limerick, were from W.T. Woodson, West Springfield and Bishop O’Connell.

Lundy was one of several high school juniors on the team that went to Ireland.

“Julia is a very athletic and competitive player, which makes her a force on the field the opposing team needs to deal with,” says Tim Prosser, her Robinson, club and MVP International coach.

The 10-day trip was a stretching experience on and off the field for Lundy, who had never been outside of the United States.

They were in Ireland in conjunction with the 21U men’s world championship and the MVP squad was able to meet the USA team that won gold in Europe.

“I really enjoyed seeing the city of Dublin and the city of Limerick,” she notes. “They are on opposite parts of Ireland and I thought it was cool to see them both and also meet the men’s team – those were highlights for me. They were crazy good, the U.S. men.”

Besides facing Irish and American lacrosse teams, the MVP International squad was able to take a walking tour of Dublin, visit the Cliffs of Moher, take in the sights of a castle, sample local food and try out some of the Gaelic Games.

“We did Gaelic football and hurling and they were really fun. I really loved the cliffs – I thought it was so beautiful,” Lindy says. “It was absolutely unique.”

On and off the field, Lindy enjoyed the experience.

“I thought it was very cool to meet new people and abide by international rules,” she notes. “I think that was a little bit of a change but I liked seeing what it was like. There was one point during the game where I took a jump ball. You know what it like in basketball when you take a jump ball? I took one, but in lacrosse. I had never done that before. The jump ball was caused, I believe, one girl on our team and their team fouled each other at the same time.”

In Virginia high school play, there is alternate possession on such occasions.

“Instead of having alternate possession, they had a jump ball,” Lindy says.

She was joined on the trip by sister and teammate Emma, a freshman at Robinson High, and their mother, Kara, a former swimmer at Paul VI High in Fairfax, Virginia.

Their father, James, went to James Madison High in Virginia and played water polo and was a swimmer. Julia and Emma have two younger siblings.

Other members of the MVP International team included middies Natalie Anderson and Madelyn Arca; attacks Erin Soule, Ann Suddarth, Claire Varley, Mia Young, and Ashlynn Maher; defender Caleigh Jones; and goalies Bristol Sine and Hannah Smith.

Coaches for the MVP International team were Prosser and TJ Finnerty, the new girls’ lacrosse coach at the Flint High School in Oakton, Virginia. Both are coaches with Virginia One Girls Lacrosse in which nearly every MVP player from the Ireland trip is involved.

They are back with their club team this month – with memories of Ireland still fresh.

“Touring the University of Limerick was a very good experience,” Julia Lindy says. “We had known about this trip for a long time. When we got the opportunity to go on the trip and see a place we had never seen before, we all wanted to go. If you get the opportunity, just go for it.”

Editor’s note: David Driver is the former sports editor of papers in Arlington and Harrisonburg in Virginia and worked for papers in Burke and Springfield; he was in Ireland in March and interviewed American basketball players. His book “Hoop Dreams In Europe: Americans Building Basketball Careers In Europe,” was published in March and is available on Amazon and at his website – www.daytondavid.com.

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